Moved from the Budget Board: anyone else eliminating High Fructose Corn Syrup

I heard on the business news that Heinz is trying to grow sweeter tomatoes in order to eliminate HFCS. The reason is NOT for health, but because corn is becoming too expensive for them. Here is the article from the Wall Street Journal:

Seeking Sweet Savings
As Ethanol Boosts Corn Price,
Heinz Develops New Tomatoes
To Reduce Syrup in Its Ketchup
By JULIE JARGON
October 2, 2007; Page B1

STOCKTON, Calif. -- The plump, oval tomato Rich Ozminkowski held in his hand here at H.J. Heinz's experimental farm resembled the common Roma variety, yet it was anything but. The tomato -- whose very name is proprietary information -- is 5% to 10% sweeter than the variety now used in Heinz ketchup, and it is a weapon in the company's war on spiraling costs.

With prices for corn syrup and other ketchup ingredients going up faster than Heinz can raise its own prices, the Pittsburgh-based condiment king is overhauling its breeding operations to help compensate. Heinz is developing sweeter tomatoes that could cut down on its need for corn syrup, as well as varieties that resist disease, stay fresh longer and produce a thicker consistency. "The new seed work is all about creating the perfect tomato," says Mr. Ozminkowski, the company's manager of agriculture research.


Heinz's secret new tomato variety, which is 5% to 10% sweeter than the one it uses in ketchup now.
The ethanol industry's consumption of corn is just one factor driving up its price. Rising global demand for meat is also boosting prices, since corn is a key ingredient of animal feed. The cost of a bushel of corn has risen to around $3, about 40% higher than it was a year ago, putting pressure on many food companies. Meats producer Tyson Foods Inc. recently lowered its fiscal-year earnings forecast due, in part, to high corn prices.

At Heinz, overall costs for ingredients rose 4.7% in the quarter ending Aug. 1. The company responded by raising prices, on average, 2.8% during that time, and it expects to hike prices further as commodity costs continue to rise.

The soaring price of high-fructose corn syrup is particularly troubling for Heinz. The syrup accounts for about 10% of the cost of producing a bottle of ketchup. Heinz is now paying 25% more for corn syrup than it did two years ago.

Tomatoes, which account for a third of the cost of making the bottle of ketchup, have also become more expensive. The recently buoyant real-estate market in California, where Heinz gets all of the tomatoes used in its U.S. ketchup, increased the cost of farmland, and higher petroleum prices boosted the costs of cultivating the crops. Between 2000 and 2005, the price of California tomatoes used in ketchup, tomato paste and tomato sauce hovered around $50 per ton. In 2006, it shot up to $58 per ton and this year reached $63. Hal Robertson, a third-generation grower of tomatoes for Heinz at a farm a few miles from Stockton, recently installed an underground irrigation system to save water. "It used to cost $1,800 an acre to grow tomatoes," he says. "Now it costs $2,300 to $2,400 an acre."

To help keep its own costs down, Heinz, one of the few food producers that breeds its own crop varieties, is stepping up efforts to develop new tomato varieties. It plans to sell them to its contract growers, who will be required to use the seeds to grow tomatoes for Heinz. These growers won't be allowed to sell the tomatoes to other companies.


Over the past three years, Heinz increased its budget for seed research by 40%. The company won't disclose the size of the budget but says the added funding has allowed it to purchase more land adjacent to its Stockton research farm and to double the size of its seed research team to 30 people, including breeders, agronomists and a plant pathologist. Company officials predict the investment will pay off as new breeds of tomatoes help lower their ingredient costs by millions of dollars a year.

The company had long focused on increasing yields, seeking varieties that grow more tomatoes per plant. But two years ago, as corn prices began rising, the company began putting an emphasis on developing sweeter tomatoes, Mr. Ozminkowski says.

He spends much of his time shuttling among Heinz's 21 research fields in California's Central and Sacramento Valleys. His car has become his office for his frequent travels along the 400-mile stretch.

Carrying a clipboard to log information, he walks the fields to determine which hybrids to advance into further stages of testing. For two weeks each winter he goes to Australia to study how the tomatoes grown for use in the ketchup and sauces Heinz sells overseas perform in a more rainy and humid climate. Heinz also has research fields in Poland, where the tomatoes tend to contain more sugar. Mr. Ozminkowski, who has a doctorate in plant breeding and horticulture, isn't yet sure why that is, but surmises it could have something to do with the area's cooler nights.

Squatting in a row of tomato plants at Heinz's Stockton farm, Mr. Ozminkowski scraped pollen from one plant with a knife and rubbed it onto another, demonstrating how a breeder creates a hybrid. He emphasizes that Heinz uses traditional breeding techniques to create tomatoes with the desired traits -- not genetic modification, which involves introducing DNA from another species into the seed. "We select a parent tomato with high sugar content and then breed until we get the right hybrid," he explained.

In an effort to speed up the process, Heinz scientists are testing seedlings for the presence of certain DNA segments, or markers, that are associated with particular traits, such as sweetness. The seedlings with the right markers are then cultivated, improving the odds of producing tomatoes with the desired characteristics.

Heinz began breeding tomatoes in 1935 and about 60 years later began selling its seeds to competitors including Del Monte Foods Co. and ConAgra Foods Inc. But two years ago, Heinz decided to keep certain varieties to itself. "We are holding back those that we think offer us a competitive advantage," says Reuben Peterson, Heinz's director of global tomato supply chain.

The sweeter tomato varieties Heinz has already developed could be used in its ketchup in another year or two. The company is in the early stages of developing tomatoes even 5% to 10% sweeter than those.

The company won't be broadcasting the new ingredient. Heinz faces risks any time it changes the tomatoes in its ketchup, which could affect the balance of flavors customers are used to. Ketchup that is too tomatoey, for instance, could come out tasting like tomato sauce. Heinz officials say their ketchup undergoes rigorous testing before being introduced to the marketplace and that consumers won't be able to detect any difference as the company gradually uses sweeter tomatoes and less corn syrup in its ketchup.

But Heinz hopes consumers will notice efforts to make its ketchup thicker. Ever since the 1960s, Heinz has been marketing its ketchup as "thick and rich." It's counting on other tomato varieties, with a denser texture, to help differentiate its ketchup from that of rivals.

Some of last year's tomatoes were so thick they jammed the machines that grind them into a pulp, Mr. Peterson says. Heinz says it is working to modify the machines so they can handle thicker tomatoes
 
*observing this thread* while drinking my Coke and eating my oreos.... Sorry, I just can't give up the food I love. Neither myself, or my hubby or our 3 kids have weight problems. What about everything in moderation??????
 
My problem is not as much with the snacky, junk foods. We DO eat these in moderation. I bought ice cream just this weekend that contains HFCS. We will only eat it a couple of times this week and that is fine. The problem I have is if they have a dessert w/ HCFS after their dinner of spaghetti (with a sauce that has HCFS) and they had lunch earlier (a sandwich made with bread containing HCFS) and they had breakfast before that (cereal or a waffle w/ syrup -all containing HCFS) see what I mean? They've been eating it all day. And with little ones they may get stuck on a certain food and eat it everday (like my son and his ham sandwiches) so that is why I'm reading labels. Canned tomatos (including pasta sauce) , whole grain breads and cereals, graham cracker, yogurt, -these are just some of the examples of foods I buy thinking of them as fairly healthy and they all can contain HCFS- so why not switch to the ones that don't have it? That's the way I see it.
That said- I will try some of these cookies and snacks people have suggested. I'm willing to try to cut out the HCFS completely.
 
*observing this thread* while drinking my Coke and eating my oreos.... Sorry, I just can't give up the food I love. Neither myself, or my hubby or our 3 kids have weight problems. What about everything in moderation??????

For me, this is totally 100% not about weight problems. We are not overweight. It is about overall health of my family and not putting artificial, harmful chemicals in my DS and DH's bodies. Nothing artificial can be "good" for the human body, and no one else can seem to figure out what is causing so much cancer, disease, and damage to the human body, so I figure I will reduce risks where I can :hippie: popcorn::
 

*observing this thread* while drinking my Coke and eating my oreos.... Sorry, I just can't give up the food I love. Neither myself, or my hubby or our 3 kids have weight problems. What about everything in moderation??????

It's not just weight problems. Many scientists/doctors are contributing the rising rates of cancer on all these chemicals we are putting into our bodies. There are plenty of people who are not overweight, but are still in really bad shape. I am 60 pounds overweight (and losing :thumbsup2 ) but I'm still in better "shape" than my sisters who are skinny. B/c I was in the Army and once in really good shape, plus the fact that I'm working out to lose weight, I can do more sit-ups and push ups than my sisters, who are younger than me and considered skinny. I don't run out of breath as fast as some of my family either. :confused3 So, yeah, it's not just weight. The stuff also makes you age faster, susceptible to cancer and a myriad of other illnesses and injuries. The huge rise in kids breaking bones these days is attributed to drinking so much soda and not getting enough calcium.

I don't believe in totally banning stuff either, b/c it will just make you want it more. I do believe in having stuff in moderation. The only problem is that when you choose the stuff with the chemicals in it, it's in EVERYTHING, so you are eating it all day long. Which isn't in moderation at all, it's overkill. SO, I just choose things that contain natural stuff. There are colas (Boylans) AND oreo look-a-likes that don't contain chemicals, and you still have to have them in moderation, cause they still have calories. :) I also like Breyer's ice cream, b/c most of the simple falvors have all natural ingredients.

The only reason I wanted to point that out is b/c my mom is a nurse, and she said that there are tons of people who can't figure out why they end up with these serious illnesses, b/c they thought they were healthy. She's always getting on to my sisters about the way they eat, but they won't give up the food they love either. My youngest sister is only 21 and had to have a colonoscopy a few weeks ago and CONSTANTLY has teeth issues. The other sister is only 23 and already has tendonitis. :confused3 Their idea of "working out" is walking down to the mail box. :confused3
 
Along the lines of what Befferk and Princess Michelle posted, I think even in moderation is not good. You are still being exposed over time if that makes sense. I am studying signal transduction in my biology class and things in our daily life can affect our health, such as exposure to dioxins and carcinogens.

I also don't use Teflon, plastics, and I stay away from the microwave. I use Pyrex and glassware and cast iron or steel cookware mostly. I am a longtime member of www.mothering.com (it's mostly an attachment parenting site with a natural vibe) and they really know their stuff. That is where I learned about living more healthily. (Please don't let some of the extremists over there scare you, though. lol)
 
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Along the lines of what Befferk and Princess Michelle posted, I think even in moderation is not good. You are still being exposed over time if that makes sense. I am studying signal transduction in my biology class and things in our daily life can affect our health, such as exposure to dioxins and carcinogens.

I also don't use Teflon, plastics, and I stay away from the microwave. I use Pyrex and glassware and cast iron or steel cookware mostly. I am a longtime member of www.mothering.com (it's mostly an attachment parenting site with a natural vibe) and they really know their stuff. That is where I learned about living more healthily. (Please don't let some of the extremists over there scare you, though. lol)

I just got rid of the microwave a few months ago. :thumbsup2 I don't have teflon, but that's just b/c I prefer the stainless steel, and found out about teflon after the fact. What is wrong with plastics??? Do you mean plastics like Tupperware??? Cause I love me some tupperware.

I know what you mean about carcinogens. It kills me when people defend things like smoking by saying, "well my so-and-so's cousin's aunt got lung cancer and never smoked", usually that person had exposure to second hand smoke, however minimal, that caused it. For whatever genetic reasons, some people are predisposed to certain illnesses and if they are, the smallest amount of a carcinogen can trigger a response. We won't be able to prevent EVERYTHING, but we might as well try to prevent as much as we can. :confused3
 
I just looked on my box of All Bran crackers and it says "contains less than 2% of modified corn starch, corn syrup, etc.

Is corn syrup the same as HFCS?
 
I believe those indgredients are fine. I think it's the High Fructose Corn Syrup that one should avoid.
 
I just looked on my box of All Bran crackers and it says "contains less than 2% of modified corn starch, corn syrup, etc.

Is corn syrup the same as HFCS?

No not the same.

And I have made these changes not because of weight issues (dealt with that long ago) but for health reasons. You may look healthy on the outside, but inside that may not be the same case.
 
We don't eat it. It's not a weight issue for us, but a health issue. We try not to eat processed foods at all. I have a couple of indulgences though...I may be a dietitian, but I love candy corns! Pure HFCS! I feel like crap after eating them but luckily its only a handful once a year.
We make lots of food ourselves, it tastes better anyway.
 
What is wrong with plastics??? Do you mean plastics like Tupperware??? Cause I love me some tupperware.

Nope, Tupperware is "food safe". What that means is that it is rigorously tested and has been given the right to use the international food safe symbol because it does not contain harmful chemicals and will not leach things into your food. What you need to be aware of is the plastic wrap you put over things and yogurt containers etc those contain formaldehyde and other nasty chemicals that can leach into your food particularly when they are heated up.

I have been told by my doctor that one of the problems with HFCS is that our bodies are only able to metabolize 20mg of the stuff per day. A single can of Coke contains 40mg. Our bodies have no choice but to store the rest of it as fat. Nasty stuff. We're working on eliminating it here too.
 
Nope, Tupperware is "food safe". What that means is that it is rigorously tested and has been given the right to use the international food safe symbol because it does not contain harmful chemicals and will not leach things into your food. What you need to be aware of is the plastic wrap you put over things and yogurt containers etc those contain formaldehyde and other nasty chemicals that can leach into your food particularly when they are heated up.

I have been told by my doctor that one of the problems with HFCS is that our bodies are only able to metabolize 20mg of the stuff per day. A single can of Coke contains 40mg. Our bodies have no choice but to store the rest of it as fat. Nasty stuff. We're working on eliminating it here too.

So, the plastic wrap is OK as long as you don't heat it up??? Whew, I'm glad tupperware is safe, my poor Tupperware lady would have a stroke if I didn't buy tupperware anymore. :rotfl:

I just looked through my cabinets today. Luckily, I hit up Trader Joe's last week and Whole Foods a while before. My granola bars, cereal bars, PB crackers, chips, etc. were all HFCS free. My gingerale though....second on the list, HFCS. Won't be buying that brand again, I'll have to hit up Whole Foods or my butcher for the natural stuff. Even DS's Disney Einstein cereal was clear. :thumbsup2 Oh, my Vans Organic waffles are in the clear as well....bread didn't make it, but atleast it only contains "less than 2%". I really hope eliminating HFCS gives me some extra "umph" in my weight loss efforts. Even if it doesn't, atleast I'll be healthier :)
 
I have my 12yo son reading labels for it now. He's amazed how often he finds it. We're off to Whole Foods for some juice and soda so he can drink them once in a while. BTW, I found a new Sara Lee bread that does not use HFCS to sweeten, it's the high fiber whole wheat and multi-grain variety. We also went looking for peanut butter without HFCS or any oil mutated by hydrogen and found 3-all in small jars and expensive. I told him he was worth it. Try finding any kind of jam(no jelly due to gelatin) without it. We went for the Polander and an all fruit brand. Again, expensive. I explained childhood obesity and Type II diabetes increases to him. We also talked about his brain and possible cancer causes. I don't want to make him paranoid but he needs to know.
 
We also went looking for peanut butter without HFCS or any oil mutated by hydrogen and found 3-all in small jars and expensive.

Costco makes an organic peanut butter under their Kirkland brand. The ingredients are roasted organic peanuts and salt. Considering the amount you get, it isn't too expensive.

Samantha
 
Watch out for worn out tupperware. If it has wear and tear and scratches it is leaking PCB's (known cancer causing agent) into your foods. Especially when you use it to microwave food or if you store acidic food in it such as tomato sauce.
We try to store everything in glass with plasic lids that do not touch the food. Crate and Barrel has lots of these containers at thier outlet.
 
We don't eat anything "unnatural" including HFCS.

I shop at Whole Foods, Trader Joes and the natural health sections of the supermarkets. Expect to pay a lot more for groceries eating healthy, but you'll lose weight and have a lot of energy!

My son who is in his 3rd year of college buys his groceries in Boston at Whole Foods and cooks for himself every night...a healthy meal! He snacks on yogurt and oatmeal, fruits and veges too. Must be why he's high honors LOL,

Dr. Oz..The Truth About Food, on Discovery Health is great to watch about nutrition it's really interesting.
 













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